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UK/India: British Charity Commission continue to support organisations implicated in Gujarat massacres

Source:

South Asia Solidarity Group

One year after the Gujarat genocide, a petition was delivered to the British Charity Commission, because the organisations which financed the massacres and the continuing communal violence are still enjoying charity status in Britain.

Petition to the UK Charity Commission

We, the undersigned, wish to express our deep concern that British-based organizations involved in fundraising for groups proved to have orchestrated and carried out genocidal attacks in India are still enjoying charity status. We urge you to immediately withdraw the charity status of the Hindu Swayamsevak Sangh (HSS), of Sewa International which fundraises using the HSS’s charity registration number, and of the Vishwa Hindu Parishad (VHP) UK.

In February and March 2002 Gujarat state in India witnessed state
sponsored attacks on the minority Muslim community in which at least 2,000
people – the majority women and children - were horrifically tortured and
killed. Many thousands more have seen their families, homes and livelihoods
destroyed.

Extensive evidence collected by independent human rights
organisations such as Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International, as well as
the British High Commission in India and the international media has confirmed
that the massacres were planned and carried out by a network of Hindu
supremacist organisations, the VHP, RSS and others, collectively known as the
Sangh Parivar. These groups have subsequently stated their intention of
repeating the Gujarat ‘experiment’ elsewhere in India.

In Britain
branches of the same organisations are diverting funds collected in the name of
welfare to this ongoing campaign of hatred and violence against minority
communities in India. Some of these organisations including the HSS (charity no.
267309) - which is the international wing of the RSS and fundraises through Sewa
International – and the VHP (UK) (charity no. 262684) enjoy the status of
registered charities. This is a major factor enabling them to raise funds on a
large scale often from donors unaware of their activities in India.

A
Channel 4 News report on December 12, 2002 exposed Sewa International (whose
gross income rose from £748,355 in 2000 to £2,175,971 last year) and the HSS,
the registered charity which set up Sewa International. The programme revealed
how one organisation which received £92,000 from Sewa International, the
Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram in Gujarat, is directly implicated in the February-March
2002 anti-Muslim pogrom. Forensic evidence implicates a leading member of the
Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram, who is currently "on the run from the police," as
"leading a mob of 2,000 tribal people" in an attack on Muslim minorities. The
programme also reported that a Vanavasi Kalyan Ashram leader "threatened the
villagers saying that if they didn't join in provoking the Muslims and burning
them, they would also be treated like Muslims and burnt". And a local Hindu
activist told of Kalyan Ashram's plans for yet more violence "The Christians
have made a church in our village. We have thought several times of destroying
it. One day we will definitely break it down."

The Channel 4
investigation is not the first time the links between British-based
organisations - Sewa International, the HSS and VHP (UK) – and the Hindu
supremacist outfits have been exposed. They were also drawn to your attention in
September 2002 by Indian organisations in Britain.

While we are aware
that you are undertaking an investigation in to the activities and goals of the
HSS and Sewa International, we are deeply concerned that so many months have
passed and no action has yet been taken. Funds collected from unsuspecting
British donors continue to be used to finance the ongoing violence. Children,
women and men are still being killed in Gujarat and fresh pogroms are feared
elsewhere in India. We urge you to act now.